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Photographer: me
Model: me
Nikon D300
Nikon SB900 con DIY Ring Flash
Benro A2691T
Tamron 17-50mm f/2.8@32mm
ISO 100
f/8 1/100s
Title from: www.youtube.com/watch?v=gEl1xSPyOwA
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January 16: Pharoah Sanders performs in Atomic Bomb! during the 2015 Sydney Festival
Credit: Jamie Williams
Atomic chicken littles, because I'd make an embarrassing mess of myself trying to eat regular wings at work.
Découvrez cette histoire en cliquant ici/ Discover this story in link: dioramaho.over-blog.com/article-c3c-story-saison-3-atomic...
diorama,fireplace and pictures on wall by Atomic-kitteh on etsy
iron bed by DreamComeTrueBeds on Etsy
Quilt by Marlypearl on etsy
just the view of Los Angeles on a particularly HEAVY smog night from the Griffith Park Observatory & Planetarium
©®2015 Paulo von Borries
Evil Atomic Man Lives!
After the nasty accident with the cobra fangs the Atomic man lost both eyes & his hair turned black. Then there was that unfortunate accident with the bushman wielding a machete.
After many hours of reconstructive surgery he has recovered from all his injuries except for the brain damage that has caused him to become "Evil"!
Take care
12ozMouse
Make & Model: 1953 GM TDM-5108
Operator: Atomic Energy Commission
Headquarters: Washington DC
Location: CREHST Museum (Richland WA)
Notes: The coach with the bumper stickers is owned by the CREHST Museum, the other coach is on loan from the owner. The curbside mirror located behind the door was a custom option.
My most resent custom vintage Atomic Man parts added to a Wal-Mart Adventurer to make the “Atomic Adventurer”.
I still would like to add a LED for the eye, thinking blue for some reason.
I did have to borrow the hand copter from my other Atomic Man, so I’ll be on the hunt for a hand copter for this custom.
Sincerely
12ozMouse
was a beautiful Central American boa constrictor (Boa constrictor imperator). Central American boas are native to southern Mexico through Central and Northern South America. When she was brought to the Boise zoo in 1990 she was extremely thin with bones showing and had three layers of unshed skin - really bad shape. A Boise State University biology student volunteered to help rehabilitate her. He named his animals after towns in Idaho; he had two frogs named "Challis" and "Chubbuck," two very small Idaho towns. He named the boa "Atomic City" after what is now a near ghost town adjacent to the Idaho National Laboratory in Central Idaho. (read nuclear research - INL was built on top of the Snake River Aquifer, but that is another story). Arco and Atomic City were the first communities in the world to be lit with power from a nuclear reactor in the 1950's. Arco is the county seat of Custer County, but the new townsite of Atomic City never quite caught on. The first thing we did was to soak the boa and helped her lose the dead skin. She was so weak we had to "assist feed" her. Soon, though, she started eating on her own and filled out. I took over her care in 1991 and cared for her until she died in 1996, probably of arthritis or some kind of bone disease. She was an older snake when we got her and she had had a horrible life. I'm really happy her last six years could be spent well cared for. After she died, we preserved her skin to use in the educational programs. This picture was taken in 1991 after she had gained her weight back. View in the large or original sizes to truly appreciate the incredibly beautiful irridescence of her scales. Photo by Frank - taken with a Leicaflex SL.
EBR-1 Experimental Breeder Reactor Atomic Museum
The Heat Transfer Reactor No. 1 (HTRE-1 or "Heater One") was part of the Air Force's effort to develop a nuclear-powered aircraft. In a ground test, the reactor went to full power in January 1956 and demonstrated the principle of nuclear-powered turbojet engines.
HTRE-1 was converted to HTRE-2 ("Heater Two") and it became the world's largest materials test reactor. HTRE-2 subjected test fuels to neutron flux and 2800° temperatures, advancing the state-of-the-art for materials.